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Keyword: redtape

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  • Navy Pilots Who Rescued Victims Are Reprimanded

    09/06/2005 8:57:38 PM PDT · by Uncle Joe Cannon · 190 replies · 5,191+ views
    PENSACOLA, Fla.,Sept.6-Two Navy helicopter pilots and their crews returned from New Orleans on Aug. 30 expecting to be greeted as lifesavers after ferrying more than 100 hurricane victims to safety. Instead, their superiors chided the pilots, Lt. David Shand and Lt. Matt Udkow, at a meeting the next morning for rescuing civilians when their assignment that day had been to deliver food and water to military installations along the Gulf Coast. "I felt it was a great day because we resupplied the people we needed to and we rescued people, too," Lieutenant Udkow said. But the air operations commander at...
  • Red tape keeping Samaritans from New Orleans (Honore angrily put this issue to rest)

    09/06/2005 4:45:37 AM PDT · by Former Military Chick · 19 replies · 1,012+ views
    From combined dispatches ^ | September 6, 2005 | From combined dispatches
    Hundreds of would-be rescuers are wending their way to the Gulf Coast in buses, vans and trailers. But critics say government red tape has hampered many who are trying to help Hurricane Katrina's victims. Long lines of volunteers are reportedly being stopped on freeways on their way into New Orleans. "The military was worried about having more people in the city. They want to limit it to the professionals," said Kevin Southerland, a California firefighter whose rescue team was sent to New Orleans at the request of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). Aaron Broussard, president of Louisiana's Jefferson Parish,...
  • Webster buses turned away with no evacuees

    09/06/2005 10:27:35 AM PDT · by 2nd amendment mama · 63 replies · 2,610+ views
    Minden Press-Herald ^ | 9/6-2005 | Kristi Richie
    Kristi Richie Press-Herald Staff The nine school buses Webster Parish sent to New Orleans Friday to assist with evacuation efforts returned only with their drivers. The buses stopped at a checkpoint in LaPlace and sat for several hours. “Somebody came and told them they didn’t have a mission for them, so we loaded up and came home,” Webster Parish Schools Superintendent Butch Williams said. Webster wasn’t the only group of buses turned away, though. Several hundred school buses, which were sent by order of Gov. Kathleen Blanco, were also turned away with no evacuees — possibly because the buses are...
  • Liability fears delayed evacuation order (Lawyers killed thousands in New Orleans)

    09/06/2005 3:48:27 PM PDT · by FormerACLUmember · 55 replies · 2,300+ views
    Overlawyered.com, Times-Picayune ^ | 9/6/05 | Bruce Nolan, Ted Frank
    Hundreds, and perhaps thousands, died in New Orleans because Mayor Ray Nagin did not issue a mandatory evacuation order until Sunday morning, well after the Saturday mid-afternoon order issued by neighboring parishes. The blogosphere has been wondering what took Nagin and the city so long; Glenn Reynolds has found the answer: President Bush declared a state of emergency in Louisiana, authorizing federal emergency management officials to release federal aid and coordinate disaster relief efforts. By mid-afternoon, officials in Plaquemines, St. Bernard, St. Charles, Lafourche, Terrebonne and Jefferson parishes had called for voluntary or mandatory evacuations. New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin...
  • Disaster Officials Collecting the Dead ( New Orleans Officals stop medical convoy from entering!)

    09/05/2005 10:45:35 AM PDT · by SauronOfMordor · 33 replies · 1,501+ views
    Forbes ^ | Sept 5, 2005 | Steven Reinberg and Amanda Gardner
    The U.S. Public Health Service said a prison morgue near New Orleans was expecting 1,000 to 2,000 bodies. And more than 125 were known dead in Mississippi. [snip] And the secretary of homeland security, Michael Chertoff, warned that there will be gruesome sights in the days ahead. "We need to prepare the country for what's coming," Chertoff told Fox News . "We are going to uncover people who died hiding in the houses, maybe got caught in the floods. It is going to be as ugly a scene as you can imagine." Meanwhile, help for the living was an uphill...
  • Medical Team From Georgia, Trying to Provide Help, Hits Roadblocks Along the Way

    09/05/2005 10:16:04 AM PDT · by neverdem · 21 replies · 920+ views
    NY Times ^ | September 5, 2005 | GARDINER HARRIS
    NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 4 - Dr. Jeffrey Orledge and his medical team provided care in New York City after the 2001 terrorist attacks and in Florida last year after Hurricane Ivan. None of that prepared them for the bedlam of the past week, he said on Sunday. Dispatched to Alabama from its home base in Augusta, Ga., on Aug. 28 in preparation for the hurricane, the team drove from place to place in Mississippi and Louisiana. Each time, it found it had nothing to do or could not provide assistance. Finally, early on Thursday, the team decided to go to...
  • Red Cross bureaucracy causing frustrations

    09/04/2005 7:33:51 PM PDT · by solitas · 75 replies · 1,754+ views
    (source: http://thetowntalk.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20050904/NEWS01/509040328/1002&template=printart) Thetowntalk.com material cannot be directly posted or linked. Summation: the article is an interesting and worthwhile read about inefficiencies and many, many gripes about Red Cross ineptness and bureaucracy, and how both storm victims and facilities providers are ignoring them and turning away from them to FEMA and the Salvation Army.
  • Katrina medical help held up by red tape

    09/04/2005 6:02:38 PM PDT · by wjersey · 9 replies · 1,521+ views
    CNN (AP) ^ | 9/4/2005 | AP staff
    BATON ROUGE, Louisiana (AP) -- Volunteer physicians are pouring in to care for the sick, but red tape is keeping hundreds of others from caring for Hurricane Katrina survivors while health problems rise. Among the doctors stymied from helping out are 100 surgeons and paramedics in a state-of-the-art mobile hospital, developed with millions of tax dollars for just such emergencies, marooned in rural Mississippi. "The bell was rung, the e-mails were sent off. ...We all got off work and deployed," said one of the frustrated surgeons, Dr. Preston "Chip" Rich of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "We...
  • Bureaucrats and Indians

    06/28/2005 12:18:22 PM PDT · by neverdem · 11 replies · 571+ views
    NY Times ^ | June 28, 2005 | JOHN TIERNEY
    CROW AGENCY, Mont. The Crow Indians rode with Custer at Little Bighorn, but they have since reconsidered. On the anniversary of the battle Saturday, they cheered during a re-enactment when Indians drove a stake through his fringed jacket and carved out the heart of the soldier going by the name of Yellow-Hair in Blue Coat Who Kills Babies, Old Men and Old Women. Their revised opinion is understandable considering what has happened to them since that battle to get their valley back from rival tribes. Today it's a Crow reservation with enough land and mineral resources to make each tribe...
  • Strangled by red tape Russia's business reality

    06/22/2005 7:43:05 PM PDT · by TigerLikesRooster · 3 replies · 259+ views
    Reuters ^ | 06/23/05 | Christian Lowe
    Strangled by red tape Russia's business reality By Christian Lowe 53 minutes ago MOSCOW (Reuters) - Every time Russian property developer Denis Semykin sells a new apartment, he is required by law to register the deal at a special government office. But there is a snag: the office does not exist. "We ... go to every office that might look like this place so they can put the stamp on the piece of paper but they say: 'Sorry chaps it's not us.' Everyone sits there scratching their heads," said Semykin. Months of newspaper headlines about the Kremlin dismantling oil major...
  • WSJ: Jamming With Rummy (Rapid Acquisition Authority, IED jammers and red tape foes)

    05/06/2005 5:29:09 AM PDT · by OESY · 5 replies · 553+ views
    Wall Street Journal ^ | May 6, 2005 | Editorial (full text)
    The U.S. military is the toughest and most professional in the world, but one force it usually can't beat is the bureaucracy back in Washington. The Defense Department has 200,000 acquisition personnel, whose insistence on doing everything "by the numbers" slows to a crawl efforts to get vital equipment such as armor into the field. But the bureaucracy can be defeated, as Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld demonstrated last week when he invoked his new "Rapid Acquisition Authority," allowing him to cut through the red tape to meet urgent battlefield needs. By invoking this power, Mr. Rumsfeld has given the Secretary...
  • Deportation sought for couple in West Toledo U.S. says pair here illegally since 1996

    05/05/2005 10:14:09 AM PDT · by iconoclast · 76 replies · 1,187+ views
    Blade staff writer ^ | March 26, 2005 | By ROBIN ERB
    In the predawn semidarkness of a small West Toledo apartment, Dae and Yung Jung stumbled toward the thumping at their front door. Seconds later, officers in dark jackets emblazoned with Homeland Security crammed into the couple's living room demanding passports and drivers' licenses. Mrs. Jung was escorted to jail. Upstairs, the couple's son, Andrew, hid, stunned and baffled. Now, five weeks later, immigration officials still press for Yung and Dae Jung's deportation to their native land, South Korea. But the couple - Dae Jung is a sushi chef; Yung Jung is a longtime school volunteer - are finding that their...
  • Red Cross Red Tape Cited

    11/07/2001 1:04:13 AM PST · by kattracks · 12 replies · 261+ views
    New York Daily News ^ | 11/07/01 | TIMOTHY J. BURGER
    The American Red Cross gave World Trade Center widow Russa Steiner a $27,000 check yesterday — just before she told a House panel about months of red tape she has had to endure. Steiner expressed only gratitude toward the organization, but her problems quickly became emblematic for panel members, angered by the organization's handling of $550 million in Liberty Fund donations since Sept. 11. "Something is wrong," Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-La.) said, pounding his fist. "A separate fund was established for these families. We are hearing from families that their needs are not being met." So far, the fund has ...
  • Environmental Absurdity

    08/04/2004 9:31:21 PM PDT · by Taka No Kimi · 235+ views
    Scotsman.com | RHIANNON EDWARD
    Swedes left with a monster problem THE placing of a mythical monster on Sweden’s endangered species list, in an apparent fit of bureaucratic zeal, has caused an administrative problem for the country’s authorities. "During a routine inspection of the environment court in Jaemtland recently, we came across a decision that attracted our interest," said Nils-Olof Berggren, a Swedish parliamentary ombudsman. "The court had turned down an application from a man who wanted to search for and hatch the monster’s eggs, probably believing [the application] was just a joke." However, Mr Berggren found there was an actual decision from 1986 placing...
  • Schwarzenegger takes aim at red tape

    06/26/2004 10:35:22 AM PDT · by FairOpinion · 8 replies · 180+ views
    Financial Times ^ | June 25, 2004 | Christopher Parkes
    Arnold Schwarzenegger has launched his most ambitious project to date with a scheme to save California "hundreds of millions of dollars" on the $4bn the state spends each year on goods and services. The governor's plan to centralise purchasing in a single agency is the first and relatively modest step in his much-anticipated California Performance Review - he calls it "blowing up boxes" - to clear red tape, bureaucracy and waste. Observers expect the Republican governor to make the performance review the centrepiece of his first term in office. Plans already drafted, including disbanding some 200 state boards and commissions...
  • US bans time-honoured typeface (Foggy Bottom takes a stand!)

    02/03/2004 10:44:45 AM PST · by Akira · 80 replies · 1,058+ views
    ABC News Online ^ | Jan 30, 2004 | AFP
    In a sign that no matter is too small to affect international diplomacy, the US State Department has issued an edict banning its longtime standard typeface from all official correspondence and replacing it with a "more modern" font. In an internal memorandum distributed on Wednesday, the department declared "Courier New 12" - the font and size decreed for US diplomatic documents for years - to be obsolete and unacceptable after February 1. "In response to many requests and with a view to making our written work easier to read, we are moving to a new standard font: 'Times New Roman...
  • Much Ado About a Sign: Businessman takes shot at Brookhaven's legal embarrassments

    08/11/2003 7:37:18 AM PDT · by new cruelty · 19 replies · 312+ views
    Newsday ^ | August 11, 2003 | Indrani Sen
    Among the garish signs of bagel shops and chain bookstores, next to the familiar golden arches on the north side of Route 347, a plain white board with stark black lettering is a sign of bad times for town Republicans. "WELCOME TO CROOKHAVEN TOWNSHIP," it reads. Erected by Stony Brook native Bill Sullivan last week outside B. Sullivan's, his now-defunct catering hall, bar and club, the sign provoked double-takes from some drivers. Others stopped to take a photo. Still others clapped Sullivan, 39, on the back and commended him for his "guts." LOOK! AN EXCERPT!
  • Mine Closed, Lest Snakes Worry

    04/22/2003 2:38:41 AM PDT · by kattracks · 8 replies · 235+ views
    CNSNews.com ^ | 4/22/03 | National Center for Public Policy Research
    (Editor's Note: The following is the 31th of 100 stories regarding government regulation from the book Shattered Dreams, written by the National Center for Public Policy Research. CNSNews.com will publish an additional story each day.)Jay Montfort's Sour Mountain Realty is a family-owned New York company that has had a tough time with New York State's Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). The story begins early in the last decade, when owner Jay Montfort decided to operate a surface mine. Immediately after he filed the required permit application to the DEC, Montfort found himself bogged down in a complicated and time-consuming process....
  • Mr. Pratt's Potty Protest

    08/30/2002 10:41:39 AM PDT · by Tumbleweed_Connection · 13 replies · 198+ views
    NewsMax ^ | 8/30/02 | Limbacher
    The State of Maryland told land owner Gene Pratt he could not build a small office building on his property unless he coughed up about $2,000 for a certified architect's drawing of the project, so he erected an outhouse on the roadside site to protest the costly government red tape. "When you get to be 67 years old you just don't need the aggravation," Pratt told the Associated Press. "I'm definitely not going to build anything there now." It seems that a landowner does not need an expensive drawing of a two holer to build it, so Pratt, who appears...
  • MORE DELAYS: IRAQ NOW SAYS U.S. MUST PUBLISH "INTENT TO ATTACK" NOTICE IN BAGHDAD PAPER

    08/14/2002 8:27:17 PM PDT · by Pistias · 12 replies · 147+ views
    Satire Wire ^ | 08/14/02 | Satire Wire Writer
    Washington, D.C. (SatireWire.com) — A confusing knot of new Iraqi regulations that require "non-resident aggressors" to obtain hundreds of federal and provincial pre-invasion permits and licenses will further delay any attack on Saddam Hussein, said frustrated U.S. officials who have also been told they must publish an "Intent to Overthrow" notice in an Iraqi newspaper of record. "I'm starting to think all the hassle is just not worth it," complained U.S. Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, who has been shuttling back and forth between Washington and the Iraqi consulate in Paris trying to get the appropriate paperwork. "We have to get...